Physical Randomness Extractors: Generating Random Numbers with Minimal Assumptions
Kai-Min Chung, Yaoyun Shi, Xiaodi Wu

TL;DR
This paper introduces a physical randomness extractor that leverages untrusted quantum devices and minimal assumptions to generate long, near-uniform random numbers securely against quantum adversaries, advancing randomness generation methods.
Contribution
It presents a novel extractor based on physical laws, introduces the Equivalence Lemma for security proofs, and demonstrates unbounded, robust randomness expansion using untrusted devices.
Findings
Achieves arbitrarily long, near-uniform randomness output
Provides security against all-powerful quantum adversaries
Enables unbounded randomness expansion through protocol cross-feeding
Abstract
How to generate provably true randomness with minimal assumptions? This question is important not only for the efficiency and the security of information processing, but also for understanding how extremely unpredictable events are possible in Nature. All current solutions require special structures in the initial source of randomness, or a certain independence relation among two or more sources. Both types of assumptions are impossible to test and difficult to guarantee in practice. Here we show how this fundamental limit can be circumvented by extractors that base security on the validity of physical laws and extract randomness from untrusted quantum devices. In conjunction with the recent work of Miller and Shi (arXiv:1402:0489), our physical randomness extractor uses just a single and general weak source, produces an arbitrarily long and near-uniform output, with a close-to-optimal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Cold Fusion and Nuclear Reactions
